"The goal is to hook up with someone else or to find out if someone would hook up with you—no value besides that,” Clark Love said. “No child should have this.”

Clark Love also points to social media games of ridicule, such as Smack ‘Em or #SmackCam, which shows video of an unsuspecting kid getting slapped in the face. Kids often post their videos on YouTube or Vine Camera.

"They send it to all kinds of kids and they're seeing it over and over again,” Clark Love said. “Very humiliating.”

"You sign in with your school, like you're pretty much talking with everybody from your school,” eighth grader Jordan Haggard said of After School. “You can type just whatever you want, 'Oh, I hate this person,’ but nobody will know who it was because it's all anonymous.”

Torres said technology is like a double-edge sword: There are great things to it, but with a potential price.

Lee agreed.

“You can say whatever you want,” Lee said. “Not many people say what they want to say up to their face, but when they go home, all the dirty work happens there.”